Attention‑based constraint to MNC coevolution in China's changing stakeholder environment
The coevolution process enables organizations to adapt to and influence their external environment. Multinational corporations (MNCs) operating in dynamic foreign markets use this capability to achieve operational sustainability. MNCs in China operate in a changing stakeholder environment that featu...
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sg-ntu-dr.10356-1722042023-11-29T04:19:12Z Attention‑based constraint to MNC coevolution in China's changing stakeholder environment Zhao, Meng Ma, Xufei Park, Seung Ho Luo, Lingli Nanyang Business School Business::General Attention-Based View Consumer Crisis The coevolution process enables organizations to adapt to and influence their external environment. Multinational corporations (MNCs) operating in dynamic foreign markets use this capability to achieve operational sustainability. MNCs in China operate in a changing stakeholder environment that features rising consumer activism and local stakeholders' persistent ethical problems and encounter recurrent consumer crises. Coevolving with this environment requires MNCs to react to consumer challenges and actively influence the environment by improving stakeholders’ ethical behavior. Based on the attention-based view and bounded rationality studies, we propose that the tension between expansion attention and stakeholder attention hinders MNCs from coevolving with this environment. Our analysis of MNC-linked consumer crises in China reveals that MNCs can reduce the consumer crisis risk by maintaining continuous attention to improving the ethical behavior of local employees, suppliers, and dealers. In contrast, MNCs' rapid local expansion weakens this stakeholder's attention, expanding MNCs' crisis risk. Our findings reveal an attention-based constraint to MNCs' coevolution and inform approaches to overcoming this constraint. This paper also extends international attention studies by affirming the significance of matching the focus of attention with environmental change for MNCs’ operational sustainability in foreign markets. Nanyang Technological University The project was funded by the research grants from Nanyang Business School and Chinese University of Hong Kong (Projects 5501126 and 3134060). 2023-11-29T04:19:12Z 2023-11-29T04:19:12Z 2023 Journal Article Zhao, M., Ma, X., Park, S. H. & Luo, L. (2023). Attention‑based constraint to MNC coevolution in China's changing stakeholder environment. Journal of Business Ethics, 186(4), 797-814. https://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10551-023-05433-w 0167-4544 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/172204 10.1007/s10551-023-05433-w 2-s2.0-85159131314 4 186 797 814 en 5501126 3134060 Journal of Business Ethics © 2023 The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature B.V. All rights reserved. |
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Business::General Attention-Based View Consumer Crisis Zhao, Meng Ma, Xufei Park, Seung Ho Luo, Lingli Attention‑based constraint to MNC coevolution in China's changing stakeholder environment |
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The coevolution process enables organizations to adapt to and influence their external environment. Multinational corporations (MNCs) operating in dynamic foreign markets use this capability to achieve operational sustainability. MNCs in China operate in a changing stakeholder environment that features rising consumer activism and local stakeholders' persistent ethical problems and encounter recurrent consumer crises. Coevolving with this environment requires MNCs to react to consumer challenges and actively influence the environment by improving stakeholders’ ethical behavior. Based on the attention-based view and bounded rationality studies, we propose that the tension between expansion attention and stakeholder attention hinders MNCs from coevolving with this environment. Our analysis of MNC-linked consumer crises in China reveals that MNCs can reduce the consumer crisis risk by maintaining continuous attention to improving the ethical behavior of local employees, suppliers, and dealers. In contrast, MNCs' rapid local expansion weakens this stakeholder's attention, expanding MNCs' crisis risk. Our findings reveal an attention-based constraint to MNCs' coevolution and inform approaches to overcoming this constraint. This paper also extends international attention studies by affirming the significance of matching the focus of attention with environmental change for MNCs’ operational sustainability in foreign markets. |
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Nanyang Business School |
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Nanyang Business School Zhao, Meng Ma, Xufei Park, Seung Ho Luo, Lingli |
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Article |
author |
Zhao, Meng Ma, Xufei Park, Seung Ho Luo, Lingli |
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Zhao, Meng |
title |
Attention‑based constraint to MNC coevolution in China's changing stakeholder environment |
title_short |
Attention‑based constraint to MNC coevolution in China's changing stakeholder environment |
title_full |
Attention‑based constraint to MNC coevolution in China's changing stakeholder environment |
title_fullStr |
Attention‑based constraint to MNC coevolution in China's changing stakeholder environment |
title_full_unstemmed |
Attention‑based constraint to MNC coevolution in China's changing stakeholder environment |
title_sort |
attention‑based constraint to mnc coevolution in china's changing stakeholder environment |
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2023 |
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https://hdl.handle.net/10356/172204 |
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